Liberty Fight – by Martin Hill

The NSA National Security Agency, (in years past jokingly referred to as “no such agency,”) includes twenty-eight declassified photos of the USS Liberty attack on their official website.

Captions for the photos include such titles as “Spattered by Isreali Gunfire,” “Ships Bridge was Clobbered,” “Shock Damage Above Torpedo Hit,” CDR McGonagle Israeli Bullet, CDR and Staff Confer Post-attack, USS Liberty in Drydock, USS Liberty Main Blast Area, USS Liberty Pierside Malta, USS Liberty Primary Blast Area, Clean-up Operations of Blast Area, Damaged Machine Gun Mount Damaged Signal Light on Bridge, and Fire Damage Port Side Amidships.”   Continue reading ““Spattered By Iraeli Gunfire”: National Security Agency (NSA) Posts Vintage Photos of the USS Liberty On Their Website”

Vac Truth – by Michelle Goldstein

Our health care system is now based on a pharmaceutical model of care with a strong emphasis on vaccinations. In the 1800s, homeopathic and nutritional health care approaches successfully treated many people who suffered during disease epidemics. Orthodox medical treatments were dangerous and comparatively less successful in treating patients.

Great divides existed between orthodox and homeopathic physicians. The attempt to suppress homeopathic medicine was accelerated in 1910 with the Flexner Report, influenced by the funding by John D. Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie. In effect, healthcare in the US was bought out and successful homeopathic physicians disallowed from further practice. This important change led to safe, inexpensive treatments being forced to the fringe of mainstream medicine, a practice which remains in effect today.   Continue reading “How Healthcare Was Bought Out, Resulting in Today’s Focus on Vaccinations and Pharmaceuticals”

Wane.com

BOSTON, Mar. 28, 2016 – The U.S. national average for a gallon of gasoline has passed the $2 per gallon level for five straight days, the longest streak since 2015, rising 5.2 cents in the last week to $2.041 per gallon Monday morning according to price-tracker GasBuddy.com which supplies the data for WANE.com’s Gas Gauge.   Continue reading “Analyst: Refinery maintenance to blame for rising gas prices”

CNN

Ted Cruz came in second in the recent Louisiana Republican primary behind Donald Trump but could win more delegates — and the the real estate mogul is crying foul.

Trump beat the Texas senator in the March 5 contest by 3.6%. Under party rules the pair each won 18 delegates. But Cruz’s campaign is using its organization muscle to sway ten more delegates toward his camp, The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday — a situation that seems to have caught Trump’s ire.   Continue reading “Trump threatens lawsuit over delegate rules”

St. Louis Dispatch – by Robert Patrick

Marty L. Rainey, a former Gasconade County law enforcement officer facing state and federal charges involving a series of assaults on women, was found dead in his cell in the Ste. Genevieve County jail Saturday morning.

Ste. Genevieve County Sheriff’s Major Jason Schott said the Missouri State Highway Patrol was investigating an “in-custody death,” which is standard procedure. “At this point, it appears to be a suicide, but the investigation is ongoing,” he said.   Continue reading “Former Gasconade County deputy accused of sex crimes found dead in jail”

RT

The Flydubai FZ981 crash in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, could have followed the pilots’ failure to manage the landing after taking control of the system, media reveal citing flight data. The final minutes are said to have been full of arguments and screams of terror.

Now that decoding of the flight data recorders of the crashed Boeing is complete, an unnamed source told Russian daily Kommersant that pilot error is now dominating the investigation as the probable cause.   Continue reading “Leaked Flydubai recorder data reveals argument, panic in cockpit before ‘fatal nosedive’”

RT

Democratic leaders in California, the eighth-largest economy in the world, reached an agreement with labor unions this weekend to raise the state’s minimum wage from $10 to $15, according to Los Angeles Times sources on the condition of anonymity, but the top wage won’t take effect until 2022.   Continue reading “‘Fight for $15’ movement wins major battle in California with minimum wage agreement”

Mail.com

HANCEVILLE, Ala. (AP) — Mother Mary Angelica, a folksy Roman Catholic nun who used a monastery garage to begin a television ministry that grew into a global religious media empire, has died. She was 92.

Known to millions of viewers simply as “Mother Angelica,” the founder of the Eternal Word Television Network died Easter Sunday at the rural Alabama monastery where she lived about 45 miles north of Birmingham, according to EWTN Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Michael P. Warsaw.   Continue reading “Global Catholic Network founder Mother Angelica has died”

Mail.com

CHICAGO (AP) — Mayor Rahm Emanuel has rejected three finalists recommended by the Chicago police board for the city’s top police post and selected the force’s current chief of patrol as the new interim superintendent, his office said.

The mayor’s office said in a statement late Sunday that Emanuel was appointing Chicago Chief of Patrol Eddie Johnson as interim superintendent. A formal announcement was set for Monday. Emanuel is trying to replace Superintendent Garry McCarthy, whose firing was part of a frantic effort to restore trust in the Police Department and his own leadership following the release in November of dash-camera footage showing a white police officer fatally shooting an unarmed black teenager 16 times.   Continue reading “Chicago mayor to introduce new interim police superintendent”

Free Thought Project – by Matt Agorist

Atlanta, GA — Cops acting irresponsible is nothing new. Cops shooting each other is also nothing new. However, watching an arguement between two cops over who can run faster, escalating into an assault with a deadly weapon, is something new.

According to the Atlanta-Journal Constitution, the scuffle happened early Friday morning at R. Thomas Restaurant in Buckhead, after officers Stephen Green, Joseph Tyer and a handful of other officers met there for dinner, Officer Lukasz Sajdak, a spokesman for Atlanta police, said in an email.   Continue reading “Two Cops Suspended After Almost Shooting Each Other in Fight Over Who Can Run Faster”

Activist Post – by Susan Boskey

“100% of what is collected is absorbed solely by interest on the Federal Debt … all individual income tax revenues are gone before one nickel is spent on the services taxpayers expect from government.” ~The Grace Commission Report, 1984

As April 15 nears…thought you would find this research on taxation in America timely if not interesting.   Continue reading “A Very Brief History Of Taxation In America”

BATR

There is immense confusion about the nature of the State. There is even more bewilderment about what constitutes a patriot. Any discussion in the civic realm begins with a cultural viewpoint. An attitude toward the proper role of the individual’s relationship with government based upon one’s value system and interpretation of civil order is natural. One man’s patriot is another man’s traitor. Where do you stand on the sentiments behind the penning of the below ideas? Quiz yourself and see if you can figure out the name of the author.   Continue reading “Number ONE Enemy of the State”

Jon Rappoport

Robert De Niro, who has a child with autism, was going to personally introduce the film,Vaxxed, to the audience at his Tribeca Film Festival in New York.

He thought the film was important. It makes a case for a connection between vaccines and autism.

Then, an uproar ensued, pressure was brought to bear, and De Niro decided to cancel the screening at his festival.   Continue reading “The vaccine film Robert De Niro won’t let his audience see”

RT

Refugees sent to South Carolina will be registered and tracked, and their sponsors will be held liable for violent crimes if a bill that just passed the South Carolina Senate becomes law.

“We can make South Carolina out of the 50 states the most unwelcome state for refugees,” said State Senator Kevin Bryant (R-Anderson), according to the Associated Press.   Continue reading “‘Most unwelcome’: South Carolina lawmakers pass bill making refugee sponsors liable for crimes”

Huffington Post

LAHORE/ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (Reuters) – A suicide bomber killed at least 65 people and injured more than 280 others, mostly women and children, at a public park in the Pakistani city of Lahore on Sunday, striking at the heart of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s political base of Punjab.

The blast occurred in the parking area of Gulshan-e-Iqbal Park, a few feet away from children’s swings.
Continue reading “Deadly Bomb Blast Hits Public Park In Pakistan’s Lahore”

USA Today

PHOENIX — A 10-mile stretch of the Arizona border with Mexico was left unmanned for two days, allowing criminal cartel members to cut a hole in the fence, drive two vehicles into the U.S. and escape, according to the head of the national Border Patrol union.

Brandon Judd, president of the 16,500-member National Border Patrol Council, told Congress that surveillance cameras spotted the two vehicles inside the U.S.   Continue reading “Union: 10 miles of Arizona border unmanned for 2 days”